Burn Treatment Techniques

Introduction on How to Treat A Burn Injury

Assessing the severity of a burn is an important part of determining how to deal with the burn injury, as well as deciding whether to evacuate the burned victim.

What are the Burn Injury Treatment Instructions?

Difficulty Level: Check for ModerateBurns First.

What are theSteps?

1.

Step One

The first step in how to treat a burn injury is the most logical step. Look at the wound site to be treated: If the skin is red and painful, but there are no blisters, chances are it's a superficial burn.

2.

Step Two

Look for blistering and wetness and ask about the degree of pain. If blistering is present and pain is severe, the burn is probably partial thickness.

3.

Step Three

Consider a full-thickness burn if the injured person reports no pain, or just a dull pain, in the center of the burned area. The skin may also look charred and grayish.

4.

Step Four

Look at the injured person's palm: The surface area of the palm represents approximately 1 percent of the individual's TBSA (total body surface area).

5.

Step Five

Compare this area to the extent of the burn to arrive at a TBSA figure. Burns covering more than 15 percent (15%) TBSA are life-threatening, especially partial- and full-thickness burns.

Tips & Warnings

The terminology of burn depth has changed: Superficial, partial-thickness, and full-thickness used to be known as first-, second- and third-degree. You may be more familiar with that naming system.

Blisters may take up to 24 hours to develop in partial-thickness burns, so the lack of blisters doesn't necessarily mean the injury is only superficial. The degree of pain may be a more reliable immediate measure.